‘Tis the Season

I received this and thought I would share.  It is the Geneen Roth news letter I received this morning.   Normally I would use my own words, but she summed up Holiday Angst much better than I am able.

 

‘Tis the Season

 

It’s Christmas and I am 10 years old. I want a tree. I want the twinkling lights, the angel at the top, the presents at the bottom. But my mother says no. We are Jewish and Jewish people celebrate Hanukkah, not Christmas. Think of it this way, she says: You get seven nights of presents, and people who celebrate Christmas only get one morning.

I am not convinced. In an attempt to console me, she gives me a “Hanukkah bush” — a 6-inch white plastic tree-like thing with red balls. I keep it until I am 12, when I accidentally set it on fire with my hair dryer.

Ah, the holidays. Here they come. The impossible mixture of nostalgia for a childhood Christmas or Hanukkah that may — or may not — have been real. The hope that this year the holidays will be different. The disappointment when it’s not. And the food. The food.

The connection between eating and being happy is probably stronger during the holidays than at any other time of the year. For many of us, being happy at Christmas is equivalent to eating with abandon. There’s something about Christmas only coming once a year. Something about working hard and deserving to celebrate. Something about feeding a vague sense of bewilderment with what seems to be making everyone else happy: food.

The students in my retreats and workshops find that despite their attempts at good cheer through the holidays, most of them handle food without any kind of self-restraint, while hiding from themselves an underlying sense of despair about the weight they are gaining. They want to be happy, they want to have Christmases of roasted chestnuts and open fires, but they feel overwhelmed by expectations and memories. So instead of paying close attention to their needs and being gentle with themselves, they deal with their feelings by eating.

It’s important to separate the nostalgia for Christmases past from the reality of this Christmas. Because the holidays come only once a year, we use it as a marking point to look back on the past and compare it with the present. If this year falls short of our memories of holiday happiness and joy, we become depressed or sad, then turn to eggnog and fudge for comfort. Yet our recollections of past holidays do not necessarily reflect what actually took place. For instance, when I remember my favorite Christmas, I envision my father taking my brother and me to see Santa Claus at the Daily News Building in New York City. I remember feeling joyful, loved, and content. But if I am really telling the truth, I should mention that I also stuck a pin in my brother’s balloon, and I was convinced that Santa Claus was a liar because the previous year, he promised me a trip to Disneyland and it never happened.

When we compare past holidays to the present and turn to food for comfort, it is usually not because this holiday is so awful, but because we have warped the past into a time so flawless that it can never be achieved in this moment.

Before I met and married my husband, Matt, I recall one holiday when I received flowers from my friend Marilyn, a happily married mother of a preschooler. The card said, “Just in case you are feeling sorry for yourself because you are alone and think the holidays would be wonderful if you were happily married and had a gorgeous 3-year-old — you’re wrong. They are as miserable as always. And by the way, happy holidays.”

The truth about these holidays is that someone’s balloon will always get a pin stuck in it (and sometimes, like I was, you’re the one doing the sticking). During that 6-week season, we can also count on being lonely, sad, or depressed. Not just because we indulge in comparisons with the past, but because during any 6-week period we experience a broad range of emotions, some positive and some downright miserable. Occasional wretchedness is part of being alive, even in the season to be jolly. If we allow ourselves to be aware of the full range of our feelings, instead of living with the unrealistic expectation of unremitting joy, we will not gain 10 pounds in an attempt to bury our emotions.

Most of us never consider what we really want from the holidays. We go through the days in a glaze of too much food, alcohol, and socializing, and not enough of what truly fills us. I recently asked a student of mine to describe her ideal holiday. She said, “I’d eat fruitcake without green cherries. I’d cry when I missed my father, who died 3 years ago. I’d be 100 percent present for my son’s delight. I’d only go to parties I really wanted to go to. I’d scream every time I heard Muzak versions of ‘Silent Night,’ and, oh yeah, I’d blanket the world with peace.”

Once she said that, she realized there were things she could control (green cherries, parties, time with her son) and things she couldn’t (losing her father, Muzak in elevators, world peace). When she paid attention to making the most of what she could control — by weaving part of what made the holidays special to her into each day — she ate no green cherries, binged only once, and her pants were no tighter on January 1 than they had been on November 15. Call it a Christmas miracle.

 Here are some questions to think about:

  • What is your ideal holiday?
  • If you could have exactly what you want, who would you spend time with, where would you go, and what would you do?
  • What would you give and what would you receive?

Write down your thoughts. Then make sure that you feed yourself daily with that — in addition to fudge and eggnog once in a while.

Maintain!!!

I am so happy I maintained this week.  This was chemo week.  It was my last treatment and the maintain is the perfect end to treatment.  I had horrible gains the other 5 treatments.

I haven’t been watching the Biggest Loser much this season.  I did watch the marathon episode this week.  As they began crossing the finish line I began to cry. I want that so much!  I want the sense of accomplishment and victory over my inner demons that reaching my goals will bring.  I want to finish a marathon too, but I want to conquer my inner demons more.  And I am each day I wake up and chose to be happy and at peace.  I am stepping toward the person I was born to be.  I am not condemed to being the person circumstance and society says I should be. I can do so much more than my circumstance allow me to believe I can do. It is painful in so many ways to see what I have done to myself and allowed to be done to me.  Seeing things from the other side is not always comfortable, but the understanding gained is worth the discomfort and so much more.

I think the saddest part of all of this is losing my best friend.  I am not sure how it happened exactly. I know it was a series of events over a long period of time.  I was the one to end the friendship.  I am still working out if my reasons were based in my moving in a direction she could not follow or her negative reactions to my choices in life.  Either way I miss her.  She knew how to make me laugh and understood that half the things that come out of my mouth only sound funny in my head. And I wish her nothing less than a life filled to over flowing with peace, love, and all good things.

Snooze Button

I hit the snooze button too many times this morning and missed my workout.  I have adjusted my plan  and will be working out after work.

I am maintaining my focus.  I will be ready for the PET scan.  349.8 here I come!!!

I just got a call for the second sleep study.  It will be Wednesday night.  I hope this is the last one.

The thought of going months between doctors appointments makes me giddy.  I will not miss the weekly labs either.

Happy Day

I do enjoy being on plan.  I feel free and at ease.

Last night I took 5 minutes to write a simple plan for Wednesday.

  • Walk or Gazelle and Yoga
  • Breakfast: peanut butter and banana smoothie, one broiled egg
  • Lunch: fish, carrots, green beans
  • After work go to the gym to walk
  • Dinner: Chicken, mushroom rice, green beans

I am 90% on plan so far.  I am very happy with that.  I have not been this committed to a plan or goal in years.  Which is shameful.

I hope everyone is having a wonderful day.

A New Day ONE

Successful people do what unsuccessful people are unwilling to do.

This year has been interesting to say the least!  Committing my father to a nursing home, breast cancer diagnosis and treatment, and life goes on.

I have one chemo treatment to go.  I am so excited and scared I could just puke.  I am excited because I am ready for this to be over.  I am scared because I must lose 29 pounds before I can do the last PET scan.  I am 29 pounds over the 350 pound weight limit for the PET scan table.  I have 2 weeks ’till my last treatment.  I am not sure what the wait is on an appointment, it may be 2 days or 2 months.  Either way I feel pressured to shed the pounds so I can get the all clear and continue on with the next stage of treatment. 

I must focus on today so I don’t freak out and make things worse not better.  

Goals:
1. Walk daily
2. 2,000 calories intake
3. 64 oz water
4. Write down everything I eat and drink
5. Blog and forum daily.

Balance and Follow Through

I have a pattern of great moments of clarity followed by complete ignorance.  Yesterday was a moment of clarity kind of day.  Today is a day of follow through, not a day ignoring to the consequences of my actions.

I over slept, but chose a healthy on the run breakfast.  I am at work, but not just sitting at my desk.  I brought my lunch and afternoon snack, no fast food or vending machine today.  Dinner is planned out, most of it already prepared.  I am being careful not over exerting myself, I am not babying myself to my own determine.

Following through doesn’t mean I am spending Biggest Loser amounts of time in the gym or going vegan.  It means I am making the best choice I can at this moment to earn back my life.  I am balancing what I am able to do with the healthy choices and it feels good.

Earning My Life Back

I am beating cancer. And I have used it as an excuse every chance I have gotten.  It is a reason to fight harder and go further, not sit down and gain every week.  Yes, I have had some complications.  And the biggest complication is allowing myself to loose almost all my strength and endurance.  I now use a handicap sticker because I can’t walk half a block.  That is crap.  I can do better.  My blood counts are good and will only get better as move more and eat better.  I am half way through treatment.  I don’t need to wait until my last treatment to start.  I only have so many tomorrows.  Each day I live an unhealthy life I am cheating myself out of tomorrows.  I must earn those tomorrows back.  I haven’t allow cancer to take them, I can’t allow my excuses and horrible habits to take them either.

Well Geez!

I wrote a blog earlier.  It was titled WOOHOO!  Now it is gone.  I don’t know what happened.

Oh well I am coping and pasting a post from the HBR forum.  It explains everything better anyway.

I am officially finished with the first round of chemo. It was a 3 day process this time. Wednesday I met with the doctor to get clearance to start and do blood work. Thursday was the actual chemo treatment which took about 3 hours. Today I had a follow up injection to help with side effects. I have 5 more treatments to go. They will all be at least 2 days worth of appointments. The followup injection has to be 24 hours after I finish the chemo treatment.

So far the side effects are very mild and manageable. My stomach is little upset, I have a bad taste in my mouth, some weird hot flashes, and I am fatigued. But I don’t feel it all at once. It seems that one or two symptoms take turns and it changes 2 to 3 times an hour.

Now as for wound care. I have been a week with out the wound vac and it is great. I still have an open wound on the right mastectomy site. It is healing quickly…FINALLY!!! The 25th will be 3 months and the left side has been healed for at least 6 weeks. I have to bandage every other day. I have learned to keep it dry during daily showers so I don’t get all stinky. This is so much better than going to wound care 3 times a week for wound vac dressing changes. Although I joked with the nurse today that I hadn’t taken my shirt off for anyone in a week and it felt weird. I go back in 2 weeks to check progress. I look forward to more good news.

Sorry this turned into such a long post. It doesn’t seem like so much when I take it one thing at a time. Which taking it as it comes is the best thing I have learned to do to keep myself sane.

Chemo

Just a quick update.  I start chemo tomorrow.  I don’t know how much I will be on.  I hope it doesn’t get in the way of the progress I made this week.

A Little Help

There are a million different approaches to getting healthy.  I am so easily bored.  I don’t have much intrinsic motivation or commitment.  I am constantly looking for the next thing that keeps me interested.   What recipe, exercise move, positive affirmation, web site, or gadget helps you stay focused?

I have a bad knee and I am recovering from a bilateral mastectomy.  I have PT exercises that bore me to tears.  I am looking for something to spice it up.

Where is my direction?

I gained 1.4 this week.  It is not what I wanted to see on the scale.  It upsets me to see I am 10 pounds away from my known highest weight.  Why am I upset by this?  Because I thought I had grown to love and respect myself more than this.  I know the past year has been rough.  The problem is I have used the rough patch as an excuse to eat what ever I want and exercise as little as possible.

I have found that I cannot tolerate myself treating me this way.  Over the last week I had noticed a shift in my attitude and how I reacted to situations.  The number on the scale was a tipping point.  It showed me I need to be more considerate to myself and treat myself with love.  Somewhere I started seeing healthy choices as a punishment.  Where did that come from?  They have not ever and will never be a punishment.

I am grateful I am seeing my actions more clearly and it is not too late to change my habits for the better.

Sleepy

I am sleepy today.  I am trying to readjust my schedule to work out in the mornings before work.  I was able to do it yesterday, and almost did it today.  I am taking things easy.  I am walking on the treadmill at a moderate pace, and believe me, my body feels it.

I  weigh in tonight at TOPS.  I think I will gain 1 pound.  I am not happy with that.  I almost allowed myself to be discouraged then I remembered I won’t drop 100 pounds over night.  Further more I do this for 20 other reasons other than losing weight.  I thought I would share a few to remind myself.

  1. With every minute of exercise I decrease my risk of cancer recurring. (Or so my Oncologist tells me.)
  2. Increased flexibility = I can put socks and shoes on with out extreme measures
  3. Tight and stiff muscles/body make every movement more difficult and uncomfortable.
  4. Exercise = stress relief, I don’t need to take as much ant-acids.
  5. Clean healthy foods = more energy and less bloat tub o lard feeling.
  6. It is easier to shave my legs when I am fit.
  7. Exercise is nature’s Prozac, the more endorphins I have running through my system the less stabby I feel.

Like I said there are countless reasons other than the number on the scale.  These are just a few off the top of my head.

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